



I'd say consider picking it up if it's on sale. If you want an ARPG to really dig your teeth into, this isn't it, but if you want a fairly light and casual ARPG to hold your attention for a bit, this might work for you. The loot suffers from the character stats / game system being a bit on the simpler side, and there's fairly limited variation in looks and effects and the crafting system is also very minor.Īll said, it's a game that might hold your attention for tens of hours, but not hundreds. There's a very limited set of maps and not much variation in the enemy types, the story is very rudimentary and basic and there is very little of actual lore given in the game (there is not even a bestiary) and the end-game modes doesn't really add much. The game performs very well on PS5, enjoying the benefits of a high frame rate and resolution while keeping the hordes of Chaos minions coming, however the core of monotonous gameplay and lack of mission variation keeps this from being considered a classic experience. There's not a lot to the game content-wise, though. As an unashamed Diablo clone, Warhammer: Chaosbane Slayer Edition fares better than most. The Warhammer: Chaosbane Slayer Edition packs in several paid and free DLCs.In this complete Slayer Edition you not only get the four original classesthe Imperial Soldier, High-elf Mage, Slayer, and Wood-elf scoutyou also get the more recently added Dwarven Engineer and Witch Hunter. The core gameplay loop is solid, sound and graphics are good (the voice acting less so, although it is serviceable for the most part.) It has good, but few, boss fights.
